Mol Plant. 2024 Jul 01. pii: S1674-2052(24)00220-X. [Epub ahead of print]
Shufeng Song,
Yixing Li,
Mudan Qiu,
Na Xu,
Bin Li,
Longhui Zhang,
Lei Li,
Weijun Chen,
Jinglei Li,
Tiankang Wang,
Yingxin Qiu,
Mengmeng Gong,
Dong Yu,
Hao Dong,
Siqi Xia,
Yi Pan,
Dingyang Yuan,
Li Li.
The discovery of a wild abortive-type cytoplasmic male sterile line and the breeding of its restorer line have led to the commercialization of three-line hybrid rice, which has contributed greatly to global food security. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying fertility abortion and the restoration of wild abortive-type cytoplasmic male sterile lines largely remain elusive. In this study, we cloned a restorer gene, Rf20, following a genome-wide association study analysis of the core parent lines of three-line hybrid rice. We found that Rf20 was present in all core parental lines, but different haplotypes and structural variants of its gene resulted in differences in Rf20 expression levels between sterile and restored lines. Rf20 could restore fertility in the wild abortive-type cytoplasmic male sterile line and was found to be responsible for fertility restoration in some cytoplasmic male sterile lines under high temperature. In addition, we found that Rf20 encodes a pentatricopeptide repeat protein that competes with WA352 for binding with COX11. This interaction enhances COX11's function as a scavenger of reactive oxygen species, which in turn restores pollen fertility. In this study, a new model of pentatricopeptide repeat proteins involved in the fertility recovery of cytoplasmic male sterile lines was proposed, which provides an important theoretical basis for the breeding of strong restorer lines and for overcoming high-temperature fertility recovery of some three-line sterile lines.
Keywords: COX11; Cytoplasmic Male Sterility; Rf20; WA352; Wild Abortion